When attempting to design a truthful mechanism for a computationally hard problem such as combinatorial auctions, one is faced with the problem that most efficiently computable heuristics can not be embedded in any truthful mechanism (e.g. VCG-like payment rules will not ensure truthfulness). We develop a set of techniques that allow constructing efficiently computable truthful mechanisms for combinatorial auctions in the special case where each bidder desires a specific known subset of items and only the valuation is unknown by the mechanism (the single parameter case). For this case we extend the work of Lehmann, O'Callaghan, and Shoham, who presented greedy heuristics. We show how to use If-Then-Else constructs, perform a partial sea...
This paper analyzes incentive compatible (truthful) mechanisms over restricted domains of preferenc...
The design of truthful mechanisms for several classes of combinatorial optimization problems was ini...
We give a general technique to obtain approximation mechanisms that are truthful in expectation. We ...
When attempting to design a truthful mechanism for a computationally hard problem such as combinator...
When attempting to design a truthful mechanism for a computationally hard problem such as combinator...
When attempting to design a truthful mechanism for a com-putationally hard problem such as combinato...
Mechanism design seeks algorithms whose inputs are provided by selfish agents who would lie if advan...
Greedy algorithms are known to provide, in polynomial time, near optimal approximation guarantees fo...
Greedy algorithms are known to provide, in polynomial time, near optimal approximation guarantees fo...
Abstract. Some important classical mechanisms considered in Microeconomics and Game Theory require t...
Some important classical mechanisms considered in Microeconomics and Game Theory require the solutio...
The existence of incentive-compatible, computationally efficient mechanisms for combinatorial aucti...
The existence of incentive-compatible, computationally efficient mechanisms for combinatorial aucti...
The existence of incentive-compatible, computationally efficient mechanisms for combinatorial aucti...
Algorithmic Mechanism Design attempts to marry computation and incentives, mainly by leveraging mone...
This paper analyzes incentive compatible (truthful) mechanisms over restricted domains of preferenc...
The design of truthful mechanisms for several classes of combinatorial optimization problems was ini...
We give a general technique to obtain approximation mechanisms that are truthful in expectation. We ...
When attempting to design a truthful mechanism for a computationally hard problem such as combinator...
When attempting to design a truthful mechanism for a computationally hard problem such as combinator...
When attempting to design a truthful mechanism for a com-putationally hard problem such as combinato...
Mechanism design seeks algorithms whose inputs are provided by selfish agents who would lie if advan...
Greedy algorithms are known to provide, in polynomial time, near optimal approximation guarantees fo...
Greedy algorithms are known to provide, in polynomial time, near optimal approximation guarantees fo...
Abstract. Some important classical mechanisms considered in Microeconomics and Game Theory require t...
Some important classical mechanisms considered in Microeconomics and Game Theory require the solutio...
The existence of incentive-compatible, computationally efficient mechanisms for combinatorial aucti...
The existence of incentive-compatible, computationally efficient mechanisms for combinatorial aucti...
The existence of incentive-compatible, computationally efficient mechanisms for combinatorial aucti...
Algorithmic Mechanism Design attempts to marry computation and incentives, mainly by leveraging mone...
This paper analyzes incentive compatible (truthful) mechanisms over restricted domains of preferenc...
The design of truthful mechanisms for several classes of combinatorial optimization problems was ini...
We give a general technique to obtain approximation mechanisms that are truthful in expectation. We ...